Poland's prime minister says he will seek a vote of confidence after ally's election loss

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Poland's prime minister says he will seek a vote of confidence after ally's election loss"


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WARSAW: Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Monday that he would ask parliament to hold a vote of confidence in his coalition government after his ally lost a presidential runoff.


The result of the weekend election leaves Tusk politically weakened, and there are questions about whether his multiparty coalition can survive to the end of its term in late 2027. It wasn’t


immediately clear when the confidence vote might take place.


Tusk's announcement came in a recorded announcement posted to social media after a vote count confirmed that that conservative Karol Nawrocki won Poland’s weekend presidential runoff


election, according to the final vote count on Monday. Nawrocki won 50.89% of votes in a very tight race against liberal Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, who received 49.11%.


Tusk said he is prepared to work with Nawrocki if he “shows a willingness to cooperate.”


Tusk's government exists separately from the presidency but the president holds power to veto laws, and Nawrocki's win will make it extremely difficult for Tusk to press his pro-European


agenda.


If Tusk survives the confidence vote, it would show he still has a mandate to govern.


It wasn't immediately clear when the confidence vote might take place.


The race had Poland on edge since a first round of voting two weeks earlier, revealing deep divisions in the country along the eastern flank of NATO and the European Union.


The outcome suggests that Poland can be expected to take a more populist and nationalist path under its new president, who was backed by U.S. President Donald Trump.


Trzaskowski conceded defeat and congratulated Nawrocki on Monday, thanking all those who voted for him. “I fought for us to build a strong, safe, honest, and empathetic Poland together,” he


wrote on X. “I’m sorry I wasn’t able to convince the majority of citizens of my vision for Poland. I’m sorry we didn’t win together.”


Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was among the leaders offering their congratulations to Nawrocki on Monday morning, an acknowledgment of Poland's key role as a neighbor, ally and hub


for Western weapons sent to Kyiv.


He called Poland “a pillar of regional and European security,” and said, “by reinforcing one another on our continent, we give greater strength to Europe in global competition and bring the


achievement of real and lasting peace closer. I look forward to continued fruitful cooperation with Poland and with President Nawrocki personally.”


Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who shares Nawrocki's national conservative worldview, hailed Nawrocki's “fantastic victory.”


Meanwhile, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen offered measured congratulations, emphasizing continued EU-Poland collaboration rooted in shared democratic values: “We are all


stronger together in our community of peace, democracy, and values. So let us work to ensure the security and prosperity of our common home.”


Most day-to-day power in the Polish political system rests with a prime minister chosen by the parliament. However, the president's role is not merely ceremonial. The office holds the power


to influence foreign policy and to veto legislation.


Nawrocki will succeed Andrzej Duda, a conservative whose second and final term ends on Aug. 6.


Under the Polish constitution, the president serves a five-year term and may be re-elected once.


Prime Minister Donald Tusk came to power in late 2023 with a coalition government that spans a broad ideological divide — so broad that it hasn't been able to fulfill certain of his


electoral promises, such as loosening the restrictive abortion law or passing a civil partnership law for same-sex couples.


But Duda's veto power has been another obstacle. It has prevented Tusk from fulfilling promises to reverse laws that politicized the court system in a way that the EU found to be


undemocratic.


Now it appears Tusk will have no way to fulfill those promises, which he made both to voters and the EU.


Some observers in Poland have said the unfulfilled promises could make it more difficult for Tusk to continue his term until the next parliamentary election scheduled for late 2027,


particularly if Law and Justice dangles the prospect of future cooperation with conservatives in his coalition.


Nawrocki, a 42-year-old amateur boxer and historian, was tapped by the Law and Justice party as part of its push for a fresh start.


The party governed Poland from 2015 to 2023, when it lost power to Tusk's centrist coalition. Some political observers predicted it would never make a comeback, and Nawrocki was chosen as a


new face who would not be burned by the scandals of the party's eight years of rule.


The election outcome vindicated party leader Jarosław Kaczyński's strategy but on Monday many were also blaming the increasingly unpopular Tusk and Trzaskowski.


Nawrocki has most recently been the head of the Institute of National Remembrance, which embraces nationalist historical narratives. He led efforts to topple monuments to the Soviet Red Army


in Poland, and Russia responded by putting him on a wanted list, according to Polish media reports.


Nawrocki’s supporters describe him as the embodiment of traditional, patriotic values. Those who oppose secular trends, including LGBTQ+ visibility, have embraced him, viewing him as a


reflection of the values they grew up with.


Nawrocki’s candidacy was clouded by allegations of past connections to criminal figures and his participation in a violent street brawl. He denies the criminal links but was unapologetic


about the street fight, saying he had taken part in various “noble” fights in his life. The revelations did not seem to hurt his support among right-wing voters, many of whom see the


allegations as politically motivated.


Trump made it clear he wanted Nawrocki as Poland's president.


He welcomed Nawrocki to the White House a month ago. And last week the conservative group CPAC held its first meeting in Poland to give Nawrocki a boost. Kristi Noem, the U.S. Homeland


Security Secretary and a prominent Trump ally, strongly praised Nawrocki and urged Poles to vote for him.


The U.S. has about 10,000 troops stationed in Poland and Noem suggested that military ties could deepen with Nawrocki as president.


A common refrain from Nawrocki's supporters is that he will restore “normality,” as they believe Trump has done. U.S. flags often appeared at Nawrocki's rallies, and his supporters believed


that he offered a better chance for good ties with the Trump administration.


Nawrocki has also echoed some of Trump's language on Ukraine. He promises to continue Poland's support for Ukraine but has been critical of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, accusing him of


taking advantage of allies. He has accused Ukrainian refugees of taking advantage of Polish generosity, vowing to prioritize Poles for social services such as health care and schooling.


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